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JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL

JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL. Ethan Hendricks. BY RICHARD BACH. Born June 23 1936. Written several books that were all very popular in the 1970s. His books promote his philosophy that our apparent physical limits and mortality are merely appearance.

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JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL

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  1. JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL Ethan Hendricks

  2. BY RICHARD BACH • Born June 23 1936. • Written several books that were all very popular in the 1970s. • His books promote his philosophy that our apparent physical limits and mortality are merely appearance. • Claims to be a direct descendent of Johann Sebastian Bach.

  3. PROTAGONIST • The protagonist in this story is none other then Jonathan Livingston Seagull. • He is faced with the challenge to obtain infinite knowledge

  4. ANTAGONIST • The antagonist of this story isn’t really a single individual character, but a group of many. • The group is the flock of birds that made Jonathan an outcast when he refused to live a simple life of just “getting by”.

  5. FAVORITE CHARACTER • My favorite character is Jonathan. • He is my favorite character because he made me want to live my life better while striving for perfection with what I am passionate about.

  6. LEAST FAVORITE CHARACTER • I didn’t like Jonathan’s parents because they didn’t support him in his quest to perfect his flying. • They told him he was foolish for wasting his time learning new flying skills because birds use flying as a way to get food and to live, not for joy. • They should’ve let him follow his dreams.

  7. PLOT SUMMARYRISING ACTION • Jonathan is a Seagull living on the planet earth, but he is very confused. A seagulls existence consists of eating and sleeping, that’s it. Jonathan is a free thinker who spends his time learning new flying moves and pushing his ability as far as he can. • All the seagulls in his flock make him an outcast. Everyone turns their back on him because he doesn’t blindly follow the crowd. • Jonathan accepts his mutiny and flies off into the distance into the afterlife.

  8. EXPOSITION • When Jonathan gets sent to the next life he is welcomed by other forward thinking seagulls who discovered the joy of flight in the previous life. • He then trains with the elder seagull Chiang who teaches Jonathan how to travel at the speed of thought

  9. Climax • After learning that our bodies are an illusion, Jonathan visits his first lifetime to see if he can teach the naïve seagulls the meaning of life. • He then gets several followers that he teaches for many many years.

  10. Falling Action • Jonathan teaches about love and forgiveness • "Do you want to fly so much that you will forgive the Flock, and learn, and go back to them one day and work to help them know?" Jonathan asks his first student, Fletcher Lynd Seagull, before getting into any further talks. The idea that the stronger can reach more by leaving the weaker friends behind seems totally rejected. Hence, love, deserved respect, and forgiveness all seem to be equally important to the freedom from the pressure to obey the rules just because they are commonly accepted

  11. Themes… • There are several ways this book can be interpreted… • Christian themes: Jonathan is like Jesus trying to get his flock so they can “follow in his teachings”. • Transcendence: Jonathan leaves this life and progresses to the next • Passion: My favorite part of this book is how Jonathan was told by his peers to give up on what he loves to be like everyone else. But he doesn’t, he follows his dreams despite what the nay-sayers say. Do what you love to do no matter what, and follow your dreams. That is what this book is about…dreams. • Jonathan Livingston Seagull encourages individuality and conviction; without these, one cannot overcome hardships and transcend a simply physical existence. As the book both heightens and oversimplifies life, readers can complicate the meaning as they wish.

  12. Social Issues • My social issue is the positive/negative effect that religion has on our society and other cultures… <Gaza Strip

  13. Social Issues • Religious distress is at the same time the expression of real distress and the protest against real distress. Religion is the sigh of the oppressed creature, the heart of a heartless world, just as it is the spirit of a spiritless situation. It is the opium of the people. The abolition of religion as the illusory happiness of the people is required for their real happiness. The demand to give up the illusion about its condition is the demand to give up a condition which needs illusions.Karl Marx, Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right

  14. Gaza Strip • The Gaza Strip lies on the Eastern coast of the Mediterranean Sea. • Gaza has been a religious warzone for centuries and is a great example of the extremes of the bad things religion can bring .

  15. Should I read this book?? • Yes, read it right now. I really love this book because it changed my life at a point when I was confused. Everyone should read this book. If you are faced with the challenge to either sell out or be yourself, read this book. If you are pissed that your parents are making you go on a mission, read this book. If your father is concerned you became an artist rather then a doctor, read this book. People from all walks of life should read it. 9 out of 10

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